Abstract

ABSTRACT We examine the impact of having a daughter on the legislative behavior of members of Congress using original biographical data from 1973 to 2015. Previous research has produced mixed results. We leverage the random assignment of child sex as a natural experiment and expand the analysis by incorporating members' overall roll call voting, voting on women's issues, and sponsorship of women's issues bills. We also replicate and extend Ebonya Washington's analyis that, using a more restricted sample, finds having a daughter liberalizes legislator voting on women's issues. We show that having a daughter has no discernible influence on sponsorship patterns, and that influence on roll call voting is inconsistent and contextual.

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